Stevie Wonder "Songs in the Key of Life" (1976) - got it
Stevie had parted company with synthesizer wizards Robert Margouleff and
Malcolm Cecil who had left him with a stockpile of some 250 songs (of
which only a handful have since been released). Rather than fall
back on those tracks, Stevie set about recording new songs. Now, this is where
the role of a producer can show its merit. When RM and MC
were on board with Stevie they'd give him the tools to explore
his ideas, but they would also make sure he finished songs and got albums out
into the world, instead of constantly starting new things and not seeing them through.
"Songs.." took 2 years of Stevie constantly telling Motown that he was ready
to deliver the album (at one point they even put up huge billboards
advertising its release... a year or so before it finally got
delivered). He recorded a further 200 songs with various guests, involved
including Herbie Hancock, George
Benson, and one or two of Stevie's exes on vocals. I feel as though after his death there will be a giant stockpile
of songs that could be released if he hasn't destroyed them or they
don't get stymied in a legal quagmire (at the time of writing, that's what seems to have happened to most of Prince's unreleased stuff.)
When the album finally came out, a few songs followed soon after release on an
EP. It suggests to me that Stevie, left to his own devices, just couldn't bring
himself to 'close the loop' on the album. In that respect, he'd probably fare quite
well in the current music world where he could just drip out tracks via
bandcamp or iTunes or something.
There are tons of brilliant tracks here ('Sir Duke', 'I Wish', 'Pastime Paradise', 'As') and of course there are. This is 1970s Stevie: he was
untouchable at this point. That said, the album does suffer from the same
'track exhaustion' found in a lot of double albums. I couldn't pick any
'bad' tracks per se, it just feels like a lot of work listening to the whole thing and could have been better presented or experienced as
2 or 3 separate albums.
No comments:
Post a Comment